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  2. Field target - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_target

    Field target is an outdoor airgun field shooting sport. Competitions are usually fired at self indicating steel targets placed between 9 and 50 m (9.8 and 54.7 yd). There are two classes; Piston for spring-piston air guns, and PCP for pre-charged pneumatic air guns. In sanctioned competitions, the same competition rule set is used around most ...

  3. .177 caliber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.177_caliber

    .177 caliber or 4.5 mm caliber is the smallest diameter of pellets and BB shots widely used in air guns, and is the only caliber generally accepted for formal target competition. It is also sometimes used for hunting small game, like fowl .

  4. Air gun laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_gun_laws

    This is a list of laws concerning air guns by country.. Most countries have laws about air guns, but these vary widely. Often each jurisdiction has its own unique definition of an air gun; and regulations may vary for weapons of different bore, muzzle energy or velocity, or material of ammunition, with guns designed to fire metal pellets often more tightly controlled than airsoft weapons.

  5. Plinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plinking

    Plinking is informal target shooting done for leisure, typically at non-standard targets such as tin cans, logs, bottles, balloons, fruits or any other man-made or naturally occurring objects. [1] The term is an onomatopoeia of the sharp, ringing sound (or "plink") that a projectile makes when hitting a metallic target such as a tin can or a ...

  6. Pellet (air gun) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_(air_gun)

    A pellet is a non-spherical projectile designed to be shot from an air gun, and an airgun that shoots such pellets is commonly known as a pellet gun. Air gun pellets differ from bullets and shot used in firearms in terms of the pressures encountered; airguns operate at pressures as low as 50 atmospheres, [1] while firearms operate at thousands ...

  7. Hunter Field Target - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_Field_Target

    A typical field target competition target painted in contrasting colours, with a 40 mm hit zone and orange reset cord. Hunter field target (HFT) is a target shooting sport which started as an off-shoot of the Field Target shooting discipline. It is mainly an outdoor sport practiced with air rifles equipped with optical sights.

  8. Steel target - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_target

    Steel targets used in cowboy action shooting A smaller steel target used for airguns. Steel targets are shooting targets made out of hardened (martensitic) steel, and are used in firearm and airgun sports such as silhouette shooting, cowboy action shooting, practical/dynamic shooting, long range shooting and field target, as well as recreational plinking.

  9. Shooting target - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_target

    Most targets used in shooting sports today are abstract figures of which origins often are not given much thought, but given the military and hunting origins that started most shooting disciplines it is not hard to understand that many of the targets at some point originally resembled either human opponents in a battle or animals in a hunting situation.